Brinkmanship

: To achieve an advantageous outcome by making the opponent believe you are willing to risk everything rather than yield.

What is Brinkmanship? Brinkmanship is a strategy where one party pushes a dangerous situation to the —the "brink" of disaster—to force an opponent to back down or make concessions. brinkmanship

: It relies on "the threat that leaves something to chance." By creating a situation that could spiral out of control, you force the other side to choose between giving in or facing mutual catastrophe. Key Historical & Modern Examples : To achieve an advantageous outcome by making

: Observers have described Russian nuclear posturing as a "bold brinkmanship game" intended to force Western concessions. : It relies on "the threat that leaves something to chance

: Recent "tit-for-tat" signaling and military posturing are often labeled as modern brinkmanship .

: Perhaps the most famous example, where the US and USSR came "eyeball-to-eyeball" on the verge of nuclear war before reaching a deal.